Hathorn v. Eaton
Hathorn v. Eaton
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff brings this action as executor of the will of Timothy Eaton, late of Athens, in this comity.
Timothy Eaton died June 28th, 1874. On June 8th, 1874, he made a will appointing the plaintiff sole executor and giving his farm and all his personal property to the defendant. Ten days later he executed a codicil revoking divers bequests to the defendant and making a new division of bis property among his children.
While, this litigation was pending the defendant entered upon the farm of the deceased, took possession of the same and the personal property thereon belonging to the estate of the deceased and such portions of the latter as he chose, sold the most valuable portions of the same and neither restoring nor offering to restore any portion of what remained on hand to the executors, but claiming the whole personal estate as his own. The plaintiff as executor entered upon the premises occupied by the defendant claiming to exercise control over the personal property, but the defendant utterly denied his right to meddle with the same and forcibly drove him away.
After the codicil had been duly established by a decree of this court, the plaintiff brought an action of trespass for the personal property belonging to the estate of which he was executor, whidh had been taken possession of by the defendant as before stated.
1. As the executor derives all his title from the will, his interest is completely vested at the instant of the testatox’’s death, and he may therefore before probate perform almost any act belonging to his office. -He may make an inventory and possess himself of the testator’s effects; he may enter peaceably into the house of the heir and take securities for the debts due the deceased, or remove his goods. As execxxtor he may maintaiix actions on his own possession, as trespass, detinue, or replevin, for goods or cattle of the testator taken after the testator’s death. So he may maintain actions, as trespass or trover, for such of the effects as never came into his actual possession, taken and converted after the testator’s decease. Toller on Executors, c. 2, § 4.
2. The evidence, unmistakably, shows a conversion of the personal property of the testator by the defendant. He claimed the whole aa his. He used and sold it according to his own will and pleasure. That the plaintiff might have maintaixxed the action of ti’over cannot be doubted.
Bixt trespass is equally maintainable. By R. S., c. 82, § 12. “The
Either trespass or trover was proper under the facts disclosed. Moulton v. Smith, 32 Maine, 406. Moulton v. Witherell, 52 Maine, 239.
3. The executor cannot recover for the crops growing at the time of decease of the. testator. They belong to bis devisees. Dennett v. Hopkinson, 63 Maine, 351.
4. The schedule, furnished us of the articles claimed as having been converted by the defendant, indicates their value as estimated by the appraisers on the estate of Timothy Eaton. They acted under oath. No other so satisfactory evidence is furnished us. The plaintiff is entitled to recover fifteen hundred seventy-nine dollars and fifty-eight cents with interest from August, 1874.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Eastman Hathorn v. Augustus B. Eaton
- Status
- Published